The match started at a good pace with both the outfits looking for an early goal.

Railways earned three quick corners to keep the rival defence on their toes while at the other end their goalkeeper Ehtesham Ahmed — oozing confidence after his penalty heroics in the semi-final — flung to keep Lalnunmawia and Lalbiakhlua’s shots at bay.

With Railways missing their first choice centre-backs Vimal Kumar and Rajiv Boro due to suspension, Mizoram looked to take advantage, but first-timer Akhil Rajbanshi and makeshift stopper-back Dipankar Das stood firm.

David Larinmuana found Lalnumawia free on the left with a good-looking ball from midfield, but the latter was well marked by Dipankar and right-back Raju Singh.

Lalbiakhlua then tried to be cheeky minutes into the half-hour mark, trying to dink Ahmed from just outside the box on the right flank. But the hero of the previous night had his near-post covered with the attempt also landing onto the roof of the net.

It was end to end stuff with the action mostly concentrated in the final third. The match’s best chance fell to Railways when striker S Rajesh hit the bar from close. Kisku tried his luck from the rebound but his effort was blocked.